GIS Basics
Coordinate Systems
GIS Data Formats
Map Design and Cartography
Wild Card
100

What is the name given to the entire dataset where spatial data are accessed from their original location for a given map or series of maps?

Project file

100

What is a projected coordinate system? Give an example of one.

A mathematical transformation that converts spherical units of latitude and longitude to a planar x-y coordinate system.

Examples: conical, utm, state plane, etc. 

100

What are the two main types of raster data?  

What types of data are presented in each? 

Discrete Raster: categorical/nominal data  

ex: land use codes, soil types  


Continuous Raster: variable quantities over area 

ex: elevation, weather, etc. 

100

Name three common map elements

Title

Legend

North Arrow

Scale Bar

Neatline

100

Which data classification method would be most appropriate for displaying extremely high and extremely low values in a dataset?

Standard Deviation

200

What does GIS refer to?  

(hint: not just the acronym) 

GUS is a system of hardware and software designed to capture, store, query, analyze and display geographically referenced data

200

What is the difference between projected and unprojected coordinate systems?

Unprojected:  

>based on 3d earth representation  

>no projection used  

>uses geographic (spheric) coordinates in angular units (degrees of lat, long)  

  

Projected:  

>use projection to transform spherical coordinates to planar  

>use planar units (meter, feet) for recording coordinates 

200

How are characteristics stored in vector data?

Vector data models can store large quantities of attribute data in tables

200

What type(s) of map is(are) best suitable for nominal data?

Unique values or single symbol maps

200

What is the difference between selecting features by attributes and selecting features by location?

Select by Attributes: a function used to choose a subset of features or table objects based on the values in one or more attribute fields.  

Select by Location: a function used to choose a subset of features or table objects based on their spatial relationship to other features. 

300

Name vector data geometry.

Give an example of each. 

Line, Point, Polygon

300

What do projected coordinate systems account for, and why do we use them?

Projected coordinate systems optimize map data for specific study areas (state, city, continent, etc.)  

We use different projections because the world is not flat! 

300

Name three advantages or disadvantages of vector data model compared to raster

Advantages Raster: 

  • Good for complex analysis (e.g. map algebra) 

  • Efficient for overlays 

  • Data structure common for imagery

Advantages Vector:

  • Compact data structure  

  • Efficient for encoding topology 

  • True representation of shape


Disadvantages Raster:

  • Large datasets  

  • No topology

  • Maps less "realistic“

  • (“blocky”)

Disadvantages Vector:

  • Complex structure  

  • Overlay operations difficult 

  • May require more preprocessing (e.g. cleaning topology)

300

What is scale?  

What does a scale of 1:10,000 mean?  

Is 1:10,000 a smaller or larger scale than 1:1000?

Scale: ratio of distance on the map to distance on the ground  

- Every 1 inch or cm on the map represents 10,000 inches or cm on the surface of the earth.  

- 1:10,000 a smaller scale than 1:1000 

300

What kind of map displays numeric values as a single color intensity between light and dark polygons? 

Choropleth map: the color represents a value (or range of values) in a numeric data field/attribute 

400

What is a feature class in comparison to a feature dataset?

Feature class is a set of geometric objects with similar attributes (points, polylines or polygons).  

A Feature Dataset is a set of feature classes in a geodatabase that share a common coordinate system and can participate in networks and topology. 

400

Explain the difference between a GIS layer and a shapefile.

Layer file: stores spatial data and display properties  

Shapefile: a spatial data model used by GIS software (minus display properties) 

400

Compare and Contrast:  

feature, feature class, feature dataset 

Feature: a spatial object with one or more x-y coordinates and one or more attributes in a single record. (one point, line or polygon)  

Feature Class: a set of similar objects with the same attributes stored together in a single file. (a collection of points, lines or polygons)  

Feature Dataset: a container for feature classes that share the same coordinate system and area extent. (a collection of vector files with shared topology.) 

400

Which map type works best for the following data?  

state names  

county population  

number of murders by city  

---  

1. graduated symbol  

2. graduated color (choropleth)  

3. unique value 

state names 3  

county population    2  

number of murders by city    1  

---  

1. graduated symbol  

2. graduated color (choropleth)  

3. unique value 

400

Describe GIS “view” of the world

Combines different layers of information stored as either raster or vector datasets that together create a view of the real world. 

500

What is Topology?

Topology defines the invariant rules of arrangement among geometric objects and the relationships between objects in a vector data file

500

What is map Positional Accuracy?

Positional Accuracy: a measure of the likelihood that features on a map are actually in the locations specified on the surface of the earth. 

500

What is MAUP?

Modifiable  

Area  

Unit  

Problem  

MAUP consists of statistical and visual issues caused by aggregating measured data using arbitrary areal units such as political boundaries. this can be overcome by normalizing data by area, population etc. 

500

Explain two data classification methods and when it would be appropriate for use?

equal interval  

quantile (equal # of features)  

standard deviation  

natural breaks  

defined interval 

500

What are two cardinal rules for spatial data file storage & naming conventions?

- <13 characters  

- no spaces  

- avoid numbers  

- avoid special characters  

- often use “shorthanded” names 

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